About LUP

FEATURED TITLES Preserving Hasler’s signature writing style, this translation tells the multi-layered story of three children executed for witchcraft in seventeenth-century Europe. The novel draws on witch trial documents and other sources not only to imagine the children’s experiences, but also to recreate the voices of those wielding political and religious authority. Maierhofer’s expert editorial interventions illuminate the historical and cultural contexts that inform the narrative. This volume both restores and invites important work on the experiences of children frommarginalized groups, challenging readers to examine notions of empathy, authenticity, and fact-finding in the communication of trauma. — Erika Berroth, Associate Professor of German, Southwestern University Bloody Women combines irreverence, an encyclopedic knowledge of film and the filmmaker’s craft, scholarly acuity, and a sense of humor. The contributors have buried the misogynistic stereotype of the horror genre. More than just another academic reading of pop culture, Clarke and McCollum have offered a gift to fans and a love letter to the women who shaped the genre. —W. Scott Poole, Department of History, College of Charleston The result of over a decade of meticulous research and careful analysis, John Thomas Scott has gifted scholars with the most extensive treatment to date of the Wesleys’ Anglican mission to Georgia. He convincingly demonstrates the complexity of personal relationships to the shape and outcomes of the mission. Future studies of the mission and colonial Georgia will be indebted to Scott’s thorough research. —Geordan Hammond, director, Manchester Wesley Research Centre and senior lecturer in Church History and Wesley Studies, Nazarene Theological College, UK

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